..Information to Pharmacists
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Your Monthly E-Magazine
APRIL, 2004


CON BERBATIS

Pharmacy Researcher Perspective

Strategies for pharmacy in the 21st century : discourses with Kevin McAnuff

Editor's Note: Kevin McAnuff was a highly respected Western Australian Pharmacist who recently passed away.
He operated a community pharmacy in Shenton Park in the 1980s and the Brentwood pharmacy since 1991.
In 1985 he was elected to the Pharmaceutical Council of Western Australia and in 1991 became its president .
Kevin McAnuff had a quick repartee and good grasp of complex issues that prepared him for his most important contribution to pharmacy nationally - a key member of the negotiating team for the Third Agreement (2000-2005) and of the management committee implementing initiatives of the Agreement..
He passed away while in Canberra preparing for the Fourth Agreement.
Con Berbatis highlights some of the thinking and strategies of this visionary pharmacist.


The following discourses with Kevin McAnuff (1945-2004) over the last seven years of his life focused on two likely strategies for pharmacy to implement nationally in the near future.

McAnuff believed in a wide health role for community pharmacy.
He enrolled in my Clinical Investigations 527 classes of 1997 which trained graduate pharmacists in clinical testing on six Sunday afternoons .
He sacrificed his scarce time because he realised that screening with clinical tests was a key for unlocking undetected diabetes, high blood pressure, hypercholesterolaemia and other risk factors in more than a million untreated Australians . (1)
This could create a river of pharmacy clients referred to GPs, a permanent new flow of prescriptions for pharmacies and primary prevention for the population on a scale limited only by myopic colleagues.
The menu of commercial, professional, political and population health benefits was an unrivalled opportunity for pharmacy.
He felt that monitoring with clinical testing, would strengthen pharmacy's control of S3 medicines and enhance fees for the prescribed therapies, which require test results to assess their effectiveness. (1)

Events have gone wrong for pharmacy since the March 2003 release of the Review of Commonwealth legislation for pathology arrangements under Medicare . (1)
Point-of-care testing (PoCT) was recommended where its " clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness could be demonstrated" following submissions by our Curtin group and the Pharmacy Guild that pharmacy was well placed to provide it.
PoCT in pharmacy refers to on-site clinical testing (BMI, Blood pressure, glucose) for the purposes of screening or monitoring .(1)

The Sydney Faculty of Pharmacy has taught clinical testing to undergraduates for years.
The Guild and Curtin University submitted that the high public access to pharmacies was a logical location for the million or more people with undetected serious test abnormalities .
They also referred to GPs poor performance in past evaluations of PoCT in Australia or elsewhere.
But these were disregarded and a PoCT Steering Group without pharmacists was appointed.

PoCT became defined as "pathology testing performed by or on behalf of a medical practitioner at the time of consultation , allowing the results to be used to make immediate, informed decisions about patient carte". (2)

The Steering Group reported the trial design and standards for PoCT in general practice and have let tenders for a Trial Manager, providing QAP (quality in pathology) for the trial, plus a supplier of devices and a trial evaluator by June 2004 and implement the PoCT trial in GPs .
In hospitals in Australia and overseas, pharmacists demonstrated in the 1970s they improved the application of laboratory results to improve drug safety and effectiveness in patients. (3)

But community pharmacists couldn't emulate their hospital colleagues' efforts because they was no third party payment, they were inadequately trained, the regulations for pathology testing excluded them and testing devices were too expensive or cumbersome. (4)
We now must await the results of the GP trials in PoCT .

· McAnuff was quick to realise that media reports on the diversion and misuse of therapeutic drugs like pseudoephedrine and dexamphetamine endangered pharmacy's medication custodianship hence required prompt decisive responses .
WA pioneered storing pseudoephedrine products behind the counter, recording the details of sales and produced the striking pseudoephedrine displays in early 2003, which were exported to other States . (5)

He , the Guild WA's Harry Zafer and the HIC in WA alerted pharmacists as early as May 2001 to exercise diligence with issuing repeats for dexamphetamine, a full 18 months before Western Australia's world highest consumption was first published . (6,7)

Again with Harry Zafer and Professor Michael Garlepp the head of Curtin University's School of Pharmacy, he led the three pharmacy bodies in 2003 to jointly propose to WA's Inquiry into ADHD the best way of cutting misuse of licit psychostimulants, was for government legislation requiring patients prescribed an S8, to allow online access by their doctors and pharmacies to their state- and HIC-held S8 medication histories and limiting patients to one doctor and pharmacy for the S8. (8)

These examples of McAnuff's ideology or aspirations are now obvious candidates for community pharmacy strategies in the early 21st century.

References

1. Berbatis C. Point-of-care payments for pharmacists? (letter). Australian Pharmacist 2003; 22:340.

2. Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Point of Care Testing (PoCT) trial. Design for a trial and an evaluation framework for the introduction of point of care testing into general practice in Australia. Interim standards for point of care testing in general practice incorporating PoCT trial guidelines . March 2004. http://www.health.gov.au/pathology/poctt/index.htm accessed 21 March 2004.

3. Editorial . Drug and laboratory usage in Australian hospitals. Med J Aust 1980; 1: 148-149.
4. Berbatis C. Clinical testing. Essential CPE. Deakin (ACT): Pharmaceutical Society of Australia, 2000 (36 pages). ISBN 0 908185 49 9.

5. Patterson M. Diversion of solid dose preparations containing pseudoephedrine (letter). Rescript (WA) 2003; 34:12.

6. Zafer H, McAnuff K. HIC concerns on supply of dexamphetamine . Pharmacy Guild (WA) Bulletin 2001; Issue 873 (18 May):3.

7. Berbatis C, Sunderland VB, Bulsara M. Licit psychostimulant consumption in Australia, 1984-2000: international and jurisdictional comparison. Med J Aust 2002; 177: 539-543.

8. Berbatis C, Sunderland VB. S8s - amber lights flashing fro pharmacy (letter). Australian Pharmacist 2003; 22:500.


Con Berbatis
Curtin University of Technology.
Email : berbatis@curtin.edu.au